The metallicity and dust content of a redshift 5 gamma-ray burst host galaxy

DOI: 
10.1088/0004-637X/785/2/150
Publication date: 
20/04/2014
Main author: 
Sparre M.
IAA authors: 
De Ugarte Postigo A.;Sánchez-Ramírez R.
Authors: 
Sparre M., Hartoog O.E., Krühler T., Fynbo J.P.U., Watson D.J., Wiersema K., D'Elia V., Zafar T., Afonso P.M.J., Covino S., De Ugarte Postigo A., Flores H., Goldoni P., Greiner J., Hjorth J., Jakobsson P., Kaper L., Klose S., Levan A.J., Malesani D., Milvang-Jensen B., Nardini M., Piranomonte S., Sollerman J., Sánchez-Ramírez R., Schulze S., Tanvir N.R., Vergani S.D., Wijers R.A.M.J.
Journal: 
Astrophysical Journal
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
785
Pages: 
Number: 
150
Abstract: 
Observations of the afterglows of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) allow the study of star-forming galaxies across most of cosmic history. Here we present observations of GRB 111008A, from which we can measure metallicity, chemical abundance patterns, dust-to-metals ratio (DTM), and extinction of the GRB host galaxy at z = 5.0. The host absorption system is a damped Lyα absorber with a very large neutral hydrogen column density of and a metallicity of [S/H] = -1.70 ± 0.10. It is the highest-redshift GRB with such a precise metallicity measurement. The presence of fine-structure lines confirms the z = 5.0 system as the GRB host galaxy and makes this the highest redshift where Fe II fine-structure lines have been detected. The afterglow is mildly reddened with A V = 0.11 ± 0.04 mag, and the host galaxy has a DTM that is consistent with being equal to or lower than typical values in the Local Group. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..
Database: 
WOK
SCOPUS
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2014ApJ...785..150S/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2014ApJ...785..150S
Keywords: 
dust, extinction; galaxies: high-redshift; gamma-ray burst: individual (GRB 111008A)